wellinghall: (Ferret)
wellinghall ([personal profile] wellinghall) wrote2011-03-12 09:26 am
Entry tags:

Bloody NHS

I have just (9.15am on Saturday 12 March) received a letter from St Mark's hospital in London, informing me of an appointment.


The letter was dated 9 March.
The postmark on the envelope was dated 10 March, and it was posted second class.
The appointment is for 8.30 am on Monday 14 March.

The letter asked me to ring one of two numbers if I could not attend, and said that there would be an answering machine out of hours. I have just rung both numbers, to find there was no answering machine.

The NHS really needs to get its act together.

ETA: That hospital's admin has repeatedly proved itself to be poor, even by NHS standards. A shame, because their clinical care is great.

ETA2: Thinking about it more clearly, and prompted by a friend's post on Facebook -

I can see that the process for making the appointment might well have been largely automatic from their point of view - "Give this chap the next free appointment." However, something is wrong somewhere - either in the design of the process, or in its implementation - when it neither enables me to attend that appointment, nor to let them know that I will not be able to attend.

I have received much great clinical care from the NHS (and some pretty poor care, too); and most of the time, the admin works just fine. However, there have also been occasions - particularly with this hospital - when fairly routine admin, particularly around making appointments, goes badly wrong.

[identity profile] the-marquis.livejournal.com 2011-03-12 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Gurthaew's experience makes me think, in the light of this post, that ceratin admin bits are seeming to fail not because they are crap but because of political (and thus managerial) pressure to fill the first available appointment slot so as to be seen to be ticking the 'seen asap' box; irrespective of the actual workability of that appointment for anyone concerned. So this sort of thing is more about the politicians than it is about the clinicians or actually the admin arm.

[identity profile] wellinghall.livejournal.com 2011-03-12 03:47 pm (UTC)(link)
You could be right there.